The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, March 19, 1908, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURd, PA.
STRONGEST BANK
Capital
$100,000
Undivided Profits
$30,000
First National Bank,
S Per Cent. Interest Allowed on Savings Deposits
0FFICEKH:
. Y. M. Low, President. J. M. Slaver, Vico President.
K. 15. TuHtiu, Vice rreaident. Frank Ikelur, Cashier.
ninECTonsi
W.M.Low, F. O. Yorks, Frank Ikeler. Joseph Until,
. U. Timlin, Fred Iki'ler, Geo. S. Kohblns, H. C. Creasy,
M Staver, M. I. Low, Louis dross, H.V.I lower.
THE COLUMBIAN.
F.STAH1.1SIIKI) tSfift.
THEJCLUrEIA DEMOCRAT,
'.STAHUSIIHn 1837. CONSOLIDATED 1869
PUBI.ISHEO EVKRY Ttll'RSDAY MoRNING,
At I'lo.imatiurg, the County Seat of
Columhi a County , Pennsylvania.
GEO. E. EIAVKI.E. Editor.
GEO.C. ROAN. Foreman.
Tkkh: Inside t he county $ 1. 00 a year
I'l a Ivam e; 1 . 5 o i f not paid in advance.
Outside the county, ft 1 . 2 5 a year, strictly in
All communication should beaddressed
TME COLOMBIAN, Ploomsburg, Ta.
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1908
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
WILLIAM CHRISM AN,
of Bloomsburg.
Subject to the rules of the Demo
cratic party.
FOR COUNTY TREASURER
W. P. ZKHNER
of Main Township.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR REGISTER AND RECORLER
(Second Term)
FRANK W. MILLER
of Bloomsburg.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
jratic Party.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER,
A. C. CREASY,
of Center Township.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
(Second Term)
CHARLES L. POHE
of Catawissa.
Subject to the rules oi the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY
CHRISTIAN A. SMALL,
of Bloomsburg.
Subject to the rules ot the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR PROTHONOTARY
FREEZE QUICK
of Bloomsburg. 1 .
Subject to the rules of the Dem
cratic Party.
FOR COUNTY TREASURER.
W. B. SNYDER
of Locust Township.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR CONGRESS
JOHN G. McIIENRY,
of Benton.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party in the 16th Congress
ional District.
FOR COUNTY TREASURER
JOHN MOUREY
of Roaringcreek Township.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
WILLIAM T. CREASY,
of Catawissa.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
ocratic Party.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
(Second Term)
JERRY A. HESS
of Bloomsburg.
Subject to the rules of the Dem
.ocratic Party.
Observe how the Penrose organs
ignore State Treasurer William H.
Berry and the master hand he play,
ed in bringing to light the State
Capitol frauds. Berry uncovered
the steal, forced the hand of un
willing gangsters and compelled
a promise of investigation. The
gangsters are forewitted. Thev
iear inai oerry wiu be the next
Democratic candidate for Governor
of Pennsylvania, and they are try.
ing to cover him out of sight and
wet-blanket him in advance,
Rtcord.
IN THE COUNTY
Surplus
3150,000.
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
(Second Term)
ELISIIA RINGROSE
of Center Township.
Subject to the Rules of the Repu
blican Tarty.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
C. FRED LENIIART
of -43erwick.
Subject to the rules of the Repu
blican party.
DEMOCRACY'S POWER,
During these skirmish days be
fore the battle, Democrats at times
may feel despondent because a
seeming quietude might indicate
apathy. The mere interchange of
jibes and jokes between the pickets
ends in nothing. The air of com
ing victory assumed by Republicans
deceives nobody. The silent cours
es of thought are running, and it
is believed the outcome will be a
splendid Democratic triumph.
The party needs no multiplicity
of declarations to entangle, or be
fuddle. No necessity demands pro
fession about every conceivable pro
ject that wild imagination might
conceive or every vagary that
dreamer might indulge. There is
today proceeding in the political
mind of this country a process of
straining the false from the true,
the lasting from the ephemeral, the
immediate good, from the delusive
vision. For months the attempt
has progressed to install a new cult
of government, to usurp unfamiliar
functions by officials not so empow
ered. The brazen program has been
conducted of diverting the people
from their proximate burdens by
undue preachment about lesser ills.
Let Democracy assert that it will
stand, as of old, against invalid en
croachment by the Federal Govern
ment upon the States, and that it
will stop the burdening of the mass
to enrich tue few. With plain and
firm front against centralized pow
er and bounty-fed wealth, Democ
racy can win. Pittsburg Post.
Delegates Chosen.
At a conference of the Republi
can leaders of this congressional
district held Friday afternoon the
following were finally agreed upon
for Republican national delegates:
James Scarlet, of Danville, and
Fred Godcharles, of Milton; E. G.
Sylvara, Laporte, and G. E. Rohr
bach, of Suubury, alternates, and
Dr. D. J. Waller, of Bloomsburg,
presidential elector.
Bankruptcy District Extendei
The bankruptcy district, in which
II. A. M'Killip, Esq., is referee,
has been enlarged to Include Mon
tour as well as Columbia county.
Does Your
Heart Beat
Yes. 100,000 times each day.
Does It send out good biood
or bad blood? You know, for
good blood is good health ;
bad blood, bad health. And
you know precisely what to
take for bad blood Ayer's
Sarsaparllla. Doctors have
endorsed it for 60 years.
On frMunt oiiim of bad blood It logfUh
Hver. This prixluowt eoiiattpntton, Poltuuuui
ubitancM r tlin baorbl luto th blood.
Keep tin bowolt opon with Ayer's Hi la.
AT
tin
br I. O. Ayr Oo., Lowoll, Xm
io uaukotnfwi of
9 HAIR VIOOi.
1 0 fC AQUB CURB.
IIVIO CHERRY PECTORAL.
m
W kar Hmlil W publUh
th formula of oil our inodlolaoo.
FOR COUNTY
VOTE
JERRY A. HESS, Ci:
SUBJECT TO THE RULES OF
Primary Election, Saturday, Ap:il
and 8 p. in.
S3
1 ,
Because of my duties ns county
r. .
I v H i
L ( W it tf. . f
taking up all my tune, it will be impossible fur me to see all of the vot
ers personally, although I would like very much to do so. I am very
grateful for the support of the voters at mv first election, and if they
choose to support me again, I shall use my best efforts for the good of
tne county. Very Respectfully,
ABOUT THE APRIL PRIMARY.
A very general misunderstanding
exists as to the qualifications ot
voters at the spring primary to be
held on April nth. Many people
think that a Democrat can vote for
some Democrats and some Republi
cans, at that election, and nnny
also think that a Republican can
vote for any persons for nomina
tion on the Democratic ticket and
vice versa. The fact that the pri
mary election is held under the law
by the regular election board has
led to this conclusion.
The uniform primaries law, ap
proved February 17, 1906, provides
that theccuttty cominiisioners shall
prepare and furnish to the election
officers for use at the primaries, as
many official ballots of each party
as are equal to double the total
number of votes cast for any candi
date of said party within the elec
tion district at the last general elec
tion and the names of all the candi
dates for nomination by the Demo
cratic party will be printed on one
ballot and the names of all the
candidates for nomination by the
Republican party will be printed
on another ballot. When a voter
enters the polls he will be required
to announce which ballot he desires
to have aud the electiou officers will
furnish him with ballot of the party
for which he asks. It will thus be
seen that no voter can vote for
some Republicans and some Demo
crats because he can only receive
one ballot.
GUFFEY NOT COMMITTED.
Colonel James M. Guffey, leader
of the Pennsylvania Democracy,
has not declared in favor of the
nomination of William Jennings
Bryan for President, reports to the
contrary notwithstanding, says a
PittsDurg dispatch.
Colonel Guffey is in favor of an
uninstructed delegation from Penn
sylvania to the Denver convention
He has kept in close touch with his
Democratic friends all over the
State and is confident that the sen
timent of the Democrats of Penn
sylvania is in favor of an unin
structed delegation.
"Pennsylvania will send an un
instructed delegation to the Denver
convention," said Colonel Guffey
when questioned regarding the re
ports that he had agreed to join
the Bryan movement.
He does not believe that this
surely Republican State should dic
tate or help to dictate the choice of
the Denver convention, and while
he does not pretend to say that a
majority of the delegates from
Pennsylvania will not ultimately
support Bryan he is sure that the
best policy is to refrain from a de
cision until the delegates reach
Denver, where they may be guided
by the situation as it may appear at
that time. The Colonel thinks it
more important that the Democrats
win at the next November election
than that any particular man shall
be nominated.
Bmittt IM Yoi Haw mwiyi mst
COMMISSIONER
FOR
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY.
n , betwe 1 the hours of 2 o'clock
Vole E.irly.
commissioner and mv own business
CAUSES OF THE PANIC.
The labored efforts to deceive the
public into the belief that commer
cial pro-perity has been restored, is
not meeting with success. The
facts are too pilpable. Traveling
salesmen make a different report.
They find business growing worse
instead of better. Merchants in the
country are afraid to buy with their
customary freedom. They appre
hend that the day of reckoning
Inay find them with heavy stocks
hud low bank balances, and to em
ploy the language ot one of the
"commercial tourists," they "order
only - what they have to have."
Manufacturing establishments are
idle because there is no demand for
their products aud the railroads
have unemployed motive power be
cause merchants and manufacturers
are cautious.
In this respect this panic is as
unusual in its contiuuauce as in its
beginning. Previous panics have
had natural causes. Failure of
crops has hitherto been the influ
encing reason for panics. With
meagre reward for their labor farm
ers are unable to renew machinery
and implements and industrial par
alysis follows, for after all agricul
ture is the principal source of
wealth in this country. But this
panic came on the heels of a phe
nomenally abundant harvest. It
broke into the midst of an extraor
dinary period of industrial activity.
As Senator Bailey, of Texas, de
clared the other day in a speech, it
may have been in part the result of
over extension of bank credits or it
may have been the too free use of
the President's tongue. But it came
and still remains.
It is probably right to strengthen
credit by hoprful opinions but it is
not right to deceive the public by
misrepresenting the facts, and that
is what a good many newspapers
are doing. As a matter of fact the
industrial life of the country is at a
very low ebb and it maybe predict
ed that it will continue '.o suffer as
long as the people are burdened to
feed a profligate government. The
country is rich in products and al
most illimitable in resources. But
it is not rich enough to endure rob
bery of a billion dollars a year from
its earnings. That is what it has
been doing for nearly a dozen years
and the panic is simply the sign of
exhaustion. No matter what finan
cial system is in operation such
ecouomic folly will bring commer
cial distress and the remedy is in
change of policies. Watchman.
C. E. KreisherEsq. of Catawissa
is a Republican candidate for the
legislature.
Before that cough turns into a serious throat or lupo- trouble stop it ..nil
It has proved its real value during 75 years, OldS
Ask your druggist for it
EXCEPTIONALLY
Attractive Styles
IN
WOMEN'S READY TO WEAR SUITS.
Tho Invitation to This Early Exposition of
Tailor Made Suits Suggests no
Obligation to Buy.
A great many women arc buying as 'well as looking.
They know the styles are correct.
We have more than fifty different models, expressing
in seventy five different Mendings of fabric, cut and trinf
ming, the very Litest ideas translated from i'aris modes by
the best designers in this country.
With the great vaiiety of styles and the great variety
of fabrics, it's going to U; a Spring cf becomingly suited
women, that's sure.
Prices are very accommodating--$10.00, $12.00, $14 00,
$15.00, $17.50. $18. ( o, $19.10, j.'uuo, $22.50, $25.00, $30.00,
$32.00 and $35.00. '1 hiuK what a variety that means.
SPRING STYLES FOR GIRLS.
This is a New Department in This Store.
Already there's an array of Suits in the very smartest
spring models the most stylish spring fabrics. The new
semi-fitting Coat Suits, pretty and girlish; the dashing new
Cutaways, with dip; the ehie new Vested Suit then the
new Fabrics, what a variety. It's easy to imagine how
charming these .Spring Suits will look Hitting along the
streets or tripping a way to school. Sizes 1 1 to 18 years.
Prices range from $10.00 to $23.00.
Separate SkirtsNew Styles.
Take .1 look nr th.it r.irkfnl of thp npv Snrinnr W.iiL-inrr
Skirts. It is a delightful study of beautiful materials;
lovely colorings, graceful styles. Panama, Serge and Voile
are here; old friends, but with new faces. The stripes, the
shadow stripes the soft color effects are so pleasing. New
ideas in trimming are worth seeing loo. Be sure to see
them. We price them $3 98 to $15.00.
F0 P.
BLOOMSBURG,
FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY
(SECOND TERM.)
If-'?' V
J.JMai8fea
CHIISISTIAN A. SMAIL1L
OF BLOOMSBURG.
Your vote and influence respectfully solicited.
PURSEL.
PENN'A.